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Scandal in Shanghai offers
opportunity for action
By You Nuo
The last few months have been an unfortunate time for Shanghai.
It has been reported that the administration of public funds has not
been strong, and in some cases eerily murky, in a city supposedly an
expert in financial management. Obviously, there remains a wide gap
between reality and the municipal leaders’ pledge, which they first made
in the mid-1990s, about building the city into an international
financial centre. Much has to be done to raise its overall standard.
However since Shanghai is indisputably the financial centre of China,
and is running China’s most sophisticated money systems, the recent
scandals have an important lesson for the whole nation. There are also
valuable lessons for the overseas merchants who tend to size up their
opportunities, in trade or in investment, by looking at the things going
on in the financial industry.
Stories about Shanghai have just kept unfolding. In the beginning, there
were reports the city’s social security funds had been misappropriated.
More information revealed a full-scale scandal. The funds had been
loaned, but not through proper channels, to some local officials’
friends in business.
As a result, the former secretary of the municipal committee of the
Party, along with several of his colleagues, were sacked. However last
week, a report in the Chinese-language press alleged there were also big
holes in the city’s public medical insurance funds. These disturbing
reports are only in Shanghai, and only about the administration of two
public funds.
What about the public funds in other provinces and under the
administration by other government offices? Nationwide, Where has yet to
be a basic set of figures available, let alone regularly updated
information. If there is a gap between Shanghai’s mission statement and
its actual performance, in other provinces and cities, there may be a
much longer distance for public fund administrations to catch up with
the standard of the international practice.
Of course, whenever problems such as those in Shanghai are exposed, it
is important to name the individuals responsible for them, and hold them
accountable for their poor service. More importantly, a stronger system
to police the use of the public funds must be developed. These funds are
now held by separate government offices, central and local, in separate
accounts - retirement (social security), medical and housing.
Proper channels must be developed at the same time for the money in
those accounts to be used as investment money - by managers with proven
integrity and expertise. Requirement of full disclosure, independent
auditing, strict prohibition of political interference, and supervision
by central government regulators are all indispensable parts of the
system.
This is the single, most important piece of work to be carried out in
order to lay the ground-work for China to advance its development
programme under the brand name of harmonious society. Poor
administration of public funds can hurt many citizens and their
families. Corruption, such as fund misuses and embezzlements, can be the
worst destructive force to the government’s credibility and society’s
harmony.
Right now, when the “harmonious society” programme is being pushed
forward, and concurrently, grass-roots governments are having their
elections, it would make sense for China to make it a central task to
build a more reliable system of public fund administration, rather than
simply building more banks and urban financial districts. The Chinese
people need to watch, discuss, and manage their public money more
attentively. The scandal in Shanghai may well serve as a timely lesson
and a new starting point.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |